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Topic: Brewing With Grits (Read 2643 times)

I passed a little country store on my way down to Charleston, SC for work a couple of months back. Apparently there is a local guy around that place selling ground grits in sacks for cheap. Being a southern guy, I would love to impart this traditional ingredient into some beer. Has anyone ever used grits in brewing? It doesn't seem that far out there for some one to have done so, but would love a little insight if anyone has ever used them. Cheers!

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Michael P MitchemBeer and Ale Research Foundation (B.A.R.F.)AHA Member since 2011

It might be easier to just use flaked maize. But if you really want to include the grits, I'd recommend a cereal mash. This is from BYO and explains as well as I could without thinking too hard:

"In a cereal mash you begin by heating a mash of your adjunct and small amount of your 6-row malt to 158–160 °F (70–71 °C) and holding there for about 5 minutes. Then you heat the mixture to a boil, boil for 30 minutes, and return the cereal mash to the main mash. The bulk of your barley malt can be mashed in at 122 °F (50 °C), then heated to 140 °F(60 °C). When the boiled cereal mash is added to the main mash, the temperature moves into the saccharification range. Cereal mashing requires a nearly constant stirring of the mash. Using flaked maize is much simpler."

Some time ago there was some debate over whether a "cereal mash" was absolutely necessary and if just boiling the grits and adding to the mash was "good enough", so to speak. I can't remember the specifics but I seem to recall having pretty good success just boiling the grits and adding them directly to the mash.

Some time ago there was some debate over whether a "cereal mash" was absolutely necessary and if just boiling the grits and adding to the mash was "good enough", so to speak. I can't remember the specifics but I seem to recall having pretty good success just boiling the grits and adding them directly to the mash.

The rest with a malt like 6 row helps "open up" the maize starch granules. It makes the process a little faster, and you don't have to stir as hard. How much faster I don't know. My thinking is that when they make flaked maize, that is just heat and high pressure from the rollers, no enzymes, so it would work.

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Jeff RankertAnn Arbor Brewers Guild, AHA Member, BJCP CertifiedHome-brewing, not just a hobby, it is a lifestyle!

Yeah, you are jarring my memory now. So for a few pounds aded to a mash it's not a big deal to just boil and stir until starches are gelatinized. Anyone who knows anything about making polenta knows how long you have to stir. BUT, there is a nice hands free double boiler method that is basically hands free.

Yeah, you are jarring my memory now. So for a few pounds aded to a mash it's not a big deal to just boil and stir until starches are gelatinized. Anyone who knows anything about making polenta knows how long you have to stir. BUT, there is a nice hands free double boiler method that is basically hands free.

Jeff Renner does that in a pressure cooker. He wrote that up in Zymurgy.

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Jeff RankertAnn Arbor Brewers Guild, AHA Member, BJCP CertifiedHome-brewing, not just a hobby, it is a lifestyle!

Thanks for the feedback everyone. I was also thinking a cereal rest might be necessary, so glad to see I am not completely thinking out in left field

I will be passing by that same place this weekend and was thinking of picking up a sack to use in something. I am a Carolina boy so I am all about using traditional, local ingredients in a beer if it makes sense. Just another way to tie my brew to my region. At any rate I will probably need to treat it like maize and use that as a percentage baseline.

Grits do not really have a distinct flavor, but it may work to impart additional sugars and possibly give some mouthfeel. But who knows. Only one way to really find out

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Michael P MitchemBeer and Ale Research Foundation (B.A.R.F.)AHA Member since 2011

I have used grits before. I boiled them first to gelatinize. They made for an extremely sticky mash and stuck runoff. If I used them again, I'd throw in a handful of rice hulls for easier runoff & sparge.

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Dave

"This is grain, which any fool can eat, but for which the Lord intended a more divine means of consumption. Let us give praise to our Maker, and glory to His bounty, by learning about... BEER!" - Friar Tuck (Robin Hood - Prince of Thieves)